Canadian pig industry: the need for change

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by Olivier Berreville

In Canada, large industrial operations designed to raise hundreds to thousands of pigs in confinement have largely replaced the small, mixed farms that dominated the landscape before the Second World War. These pig factories typically rely on liquid manure systems and have been widely criticized for their negative impact on the environment, and worker health.

Pig industry animal welfare issues may now be coming to the fore with the December 8th CTV W5 airing of  footage shot by a Mercy For Animals undercover investigator who worked for 10 weeks at Interlake Weanlings, a 3,000 sow operation recently purchased by Maple Leaf Foods from the Puratone Corporation, located near Arborg, Manitoba.

I was one of the scientists asked by the animal protection organization Mercy For Animals Canada to review the undercover footage before its release.

Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges

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This year’s State of the Inner City report will be launched on December 12, 2012, at 11:30am at Thunderbird House. For more information, please see here.

by Shauna MacKinnon

The 2012 State of the Inner City Report is titled Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges. We called it this because we believe it captures the essence of the two distinct projects included this year.  The first chapter, Who’s Accountable to the Community?, speaks to concerns raised by our community partners that the current approach taken by governments and other funders often disregards what is most important—whether or not those in receipt of services feel that they are getting the supports that they need.

The purpose of this chapter is to provide a forum for the Executive Directors of community-based organizations (CBOs) who believe that governments and other funding agencies should be more accountable to the community being served just as CBOs must be accountable to funders. This ‘two way street’ is not always easy to achieve, but is necessary if we are to move forward in a manner that best benefits those we aim to serve.

Breaking barriers and building bridges is also the dominant theme in our second chapter, Fixing our Divided City.  Like most cities, Winnipeg is divided in many different ways. The racialized, spatialized poverty that is a growing reality in Winnipeg’s inner-city has led to a divide that is particularly worrisome.

The Tragedy of Phoenix Sinclair

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by Jim Silver

Media coverage of the Phoenix Sinclair inquiry has been quite thorough and often insightful. However, the bulk of the media coverage is missing the defining feature of the story. When that defining feature is mentioned, it is buried deep in the story, and the painfully obvious conclusions are not drawn.

What the public inquiry has already made strikingly clear is that whatever mistakes Child and Family Services (CFS) staff may have made, and whatever systemic problems may exist at various CFS Authorities and Agencies, tragedies such as that of little Phoenix Sinclair will continue to happen as long as the increasingly complex and racialized poverty that is their root cause is allowed to persist.

Denying EIA Benefits because of Outstanding Warrants – Unwarranted!

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by Dennis Lewycky and John Hutton

The provincial government announced recently that it will take away Employment and Income Assistance (EIA) benefits for people with outstanding warrants for serious crimes. Recently there have been a couple of high profile cases where there were delays by the police in picking up individuals with outstanding warrants and this move appears to be the Province’s response.

The change will do little to reduce the number of serious offenders especially because it does nothing to get those who don’t rely on social assistance to turn themselves in.  The measure announced by Manitoba’s Attorney General focuses on the very poor, and will make it harder for those with the fewest resources to move themselves out of poverty.  In effect, the proposal will turn the EIA program from a system of protection to one of punishment and enforcement, fundamentally changing its purpose, scope and performance.

Playing politics with poverty in Manitoba

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by Shauna MacKinnon

It’s been a bad week for advocates working to improve the lives of people living in poverty.

Recent child poverty statistics continue to show high rates for Manitoba and Monday’s throne speech gave no hint that poverty will be a priority in the next budget.

Make Poverty History Manitoba and some 150 supporting organizations have been calling on the Province to increase the rental allowance for people on Employment and Income Assistance (EIA).  Access to housing is identified by people living in poverty as their biggest concern.  In spite of recent efforts, there continues to be a shortage of social housing and private sector rents have risen far beyond what EIA recipients can afford.  But the provincial government’s response to the call to increase EIA rates to 75 percent of median market rents has not been very encouraging – tough economic times, they say.

While this is true, the resistance to increased support for social assistance recipients is far more complicated.

State of the Inner City Report Launch

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Join us for this year’s State of the Inner City report launch!

December 12 at Circle of Life Thunderbird House, 715 Main St.

Lunch at 11:30, presentation at 12:00.
Please RSVP by December 5 to 204-927-3200 or ccpambATpolicyalternativesDOTca

 

 

Errol Black Chair in Labour Issues Fundraising Brunch – Paul Moist speech

On October 28, just over one week before Errol Black passed away,  CCPA-mb organized a fundraising brunch at the Fort Garry Hotel in Winnipeg in support of the Errol Black Chair in Labour Issues.  Thanks to the Hotel’s generous donation, we were able to raise a substantial contribution towards the Chair.  Paul Moist, CUPE National President, was the main speaker for the event.  Errol’s life is a inspiration to Paul and to all in room.  Watch the complete speech below.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=pASUziWhzhU]

National Housing Day: Still waiting for a plan

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by Shauna MacKinnon

November 22nd is National Housing Day in Canada. Canada is the only country in the G8 that does not have a national housing strategy.

There have been many attempts to rectify this in recent years, the most recent of which is Bill C-400, An Act to Secure Adequate, Accessible and Affordable Housing for Canadians introduced by NDP MP Marie-Claude Morin. This Bill was introduced on February 16th, 2012 and is scheduled for vote in the House of Commons on November 28th, 2012.

Think this doesn’t affect you? Think again. Housing insecurity is associated with poor health, low education attainment, unemployment and a host of other issues that have social and economic implications.

This affects us all.

Job Posting: CCPA-MB Director

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The Board of Directors of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives-Manitoba (CCPA-MB) seeks to hire a Director, to start May 1, 2013. The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives is an independent, non-partisan research institute concerned with issues of social, economic and environmental justice. Founded in 1980, the CCPA is one of Canada’s leading progressive voices in public policy debates. CCPA has a National Office in Ottawa, and provincial offices in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Ontario, and Nova Scotia, as well as Manitoba.

The successful candidate will have the skills and experience, and the energy and commitment, to provide the organization with the following:

Fast and loose with Tordon herbicide on the move

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by David M. Neufeld and Magdalene Andres

Our family business includes growing bedding plants. In the spring of 2010 every tomato, pepper and marigold we started curled up grotesquely and died. After weeks of trying new fixes and consulting with a plant pathologist, we discovered that the culprit was in our compost.  It looked like herbicide damage so we asked the municipality what they had been spraying. Bingo. Tordon 101.

A decade of being certified organic taught us to be careful about what we use in our growing mediums. But in 2008 we missed asking our Rural Municipality (RM) to not spray the ditches where we made hay to feed our horses and later used  the composted manure in our growing medium.

We researched Tordon/picloram, and learned Health Canada (through the PMRA – Pest Management Regulatory Agency), by law, forbids picloram to be sprayed in ditches. It is highly mobile in water and a variety of sources clearly show this herbicide damages ecosystems and human health.